Kaine: Common ground can be found as lawmakers consider gun control

RICHMOND, VA - NOVEMBER 06: U.S. Senator-elect Tim Kaine speaks to his supporters at the Downtown Richmond Marriot after winning the Virginia U.S. Senate seat on November 6, 2012 in Richmond, Virginia. Kaine defeated former U.S. Sen. George Allen in a tight race. (Photo by Patrick McDermott/Getty Images News/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON – Opposing sides are finding common ground as lawmakers tackle the issue of gun control, mental health and school safety.

Sen. Tim Kaine, a former Virginia governor and democrat, says there is enough agreement to take the first steps toward solutions that would make the U.S. a little safer in the wake of the school shooting in Newtown, Conn.

“We do need to talk about school security and figure out better security protocols, but we also can find common-sense rules about gun use that can help us reduce gun violence. That should be the goal.”

Kaine says a multi-pronged strategy is necessary to address all of the problems at work. There will always be groups like the NRA who will complain about restrictions, Kaine says it is time for those who recognize the gun violence problem that the nation faces to step up.

“It’s up to us to be leaders, put practical solutions on the table, debate them and then implement them,” Kaine says. “We owe it to the victims of these mass shootings to take seriously our obligation to find solutions.”

The NRA will take the stance they’re going to take as a group, Kaine says. It’s a stance that he says is favorable for the interest of gun manufacturers more than gun owners.

“Gun owners that I know — and I own a firearm — they understand that you can be strongly pro-Second Amendment but also put reasonable rules in place that will reduce gun violence,” he says.

As he talks with Virginians, Kaine says he sees strong support for a vigorous system of background record checks, along with a desire for better school security and limitations on “killer magazines or combat-style weapons.”

“It is also important that you don’t just look at guns,” Kaine says.

“You have to take seriously the mental health issues, and campus and school security issues. Those are some lessons we learned painfully in the aftermath of the shooting at Virginia Tech. But if you have a multi-pronged approach, you can gain the overwhelming support of the public and do it in a way that will actually reduce crime.”

Kaine’s experience as mayor and a member of the city council in lowering Richmond’s homicide rate is now relevant on the national level. While he hopes the nation will eventually be able to deal with the demand for guns, he says addressing that desire is not necessarily the best approach.

In the aftermath of the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007, Virginia lawmakers realized that there was a glitch in Virginia law, he says. Because of poor record-keeping, people who were being adjudicated as mentally ill and dangerous and who therefore should have been barred from purchasing guns under existing law were able to buy them.

“We were able to fix that,” Kaine says. “We eventually brought [the homicide rate] down dramatically and we did it by targeting, with some targeted prosecution strategies, gun crimes.”